I read (on more than one agency page) lists where it says how many suspects and how many of them have an alibi for certain dificulties (ex 8 suspects, 3 withut alibis on hard). Therefore if I foudn 8 bad or no alibis I stopped askign others. This past case I had 3 that were no or ba d(at least I thought), I accused who I thought it was and I was wrong. The guilty party was someone other than the 3 I thought had no alibi. Obvisouly aince I was worng on my guess I couldhave been wrogn in my alibis but Ithink I have seen this before. So anyways, does anyone know if the X suspects, Y alibis equation stillworks?

I'm sure the end problem is my bad sleuthing but knwoing how many no alibis sure helps a lot.

As far as I'm aware the number of people in a case with fake/no alibi is always the same; it's the number of real alibis (and by association the number of people on your suspect list) that are a little more random.

For instance, I have NEVER had a case where there have been anything but 7 fake/no alibis on Almost Impossible. You may have 10 or 11 people, 3 or 4 alibis, and 3 or 4 pieces of PE, but always 7 "suspects".